Now Sam has a problem. The outcome of this sentence is, “The boy past kick the ball”, which does not look right to him.

At this point, Sam’s brain put Transformational Generative Grammar aside and opened the file on traditional grammar. If Sam’s computer was the one doing this, this is where it hangs.

So, Sam realises that the [past] puts the verbal element into the past tense, and there being only one auxiliary element in the verb phrase means that the Auxiliary element disappears because the Main verb will now take on the Auxiliary function by adding to itself a suffix and become, “kicked”.

Thus, Sam now has the output of, “The boy kicked the ball”

That’s more than two hundred words over nearly a whole page for such a simple sentence, and Sam’s brain processed that in a split second.

As we finish, Sam’s brain begins to make up more stories about the boy and the ball.

We take our minds for granted without realising just how powerful that lump in our skull really it. This is just one small example.